Egypt: 39 Hurt in Clashes Between Islamists and Opposition

At least 39 hurt after opposition activists march on thousands of Islamists rallying outside the Supreme Court in Cairo.

By Elad Benari, Canada

First Publish: 4/20/2013, 12:29 AM

Muslim Brotherhood supporters protest in front of the High Court in Cairo

AFP photo

At least 39 people were hurt on Friday after opposition activists marched on thousands of Islamists rallying outside the Supreme Court in central Cairo demanding judicial reform, an official said.

AFP reported that the fighting took place in Abdel Moneim Square and on the October 6 Bridge that passes over it after crossing the Nile River. Islamists on the bridge threw rocks at militants below, including masked members of the so-called Black Bloc.

Some of the Black Bloc members fired birdshot at people on the bridge, wounding two of them, the report said.

Opposition activists also set fire to an empty bus that had brought Islamists to the rally.

The head of the Egyptian emergency services, Mohammed Sultan, told television that at least 39 people had been hospitalized.

An hour after the clashes broke out, three armored police vehicles arrived and began firing tear gas, reported AFP.

The Islamists were demanding an overhaul of the judiciary, after a court challenged a decision by President Mohammed Morsi to sack the veteran state prosecutor.

"The people demand the cleaning up of the judiciary," the protesters chanted, according to AFP.

Morsi's Muslim Brotherhood had called the demonstration outside the Supreme Court, which has repeatedly challenged Morsi since he took office last June.

Last month, a court overturned a controversial decree by Morsi to sack state prosecutor Abdel Meguid Mahmud, appointed by ousted president Hosni Mubarak, and replace him with Talaat Abdallah.

The court believed Morsi had overstepped his powers when he sacked Mahmud, blamed for bungling the trials of former regime officials, including Mubarak himself, after the 2011 uprising.

Many judges are Mubarak-era appointees, and Morsi supporters claim they remain hostile to them despite subsequent election victories.

Morsi's presidency has been plagued by unrest and deadly clashes between protesters and police, a revolt in Suez Canal cities, sectarian violence and a devastating economic crisis, in what many fear is bringing Egypt to the brink of chaos.

(Arutz Sheva’s North American Desk is keeping you updated until the start of Shabbat in New York. The time posted automatically on all Arutz Sheva articles, however, is Israeli time.)